Go ahead, name a celeb that is more ageless or timeless than Mr. John Stamos. I’ll wait, and I know I’ll be waiting a while because no one is as eternally youthful as Uncle Jesse! Okay, maybe Paul Rudd? But whatever–today Stamos celebrates his 55th birthday by, well, looking exactly as he did on his 45th or 35th birthdays. The Stamos is eternal, just like his talent.

Seriously, what would a John Stamos birthday post be without an ode to his most iconic character, Full House’s Uncle Jesse? For eight seasons, Stamos made changing diapers look cool and folded being a family man into his rock and roll lifestyle. No one on the show, no one in the entire TGIF universe is as cool as Uncle Jesse, capisce?

But even though Jesse made being a responsible adult look way cool bradduh man (am I the only one that remembers that very weird nickname Jesse and Joey used for each other?!), he still found time to let his rebellious side loose. Sometimes that meant doing dangerous stunts, sometimes the wildness came to him when he least expected it, and sometimes it involved major celebrities. Below you’ll find a list of 10 super wild and crazy Uncle Jesse episodes, the perfect marathon to celebrate the forever vital John Stamos.

"Mad Money" (1x21)

Hulu

Uncle Jesse loves Elvis, that much is made clear in pretty much every episode of the series. But Jesse’s king worship was put on full display early in Full House’s run when he took on a gig as an Elvis impersonator. The wildest thing about this lengthy ode, wilder than all the smoke and sequins, has to be the fact that John Stamos actually makes a convincing Elvis! He’s got young Elvis’ looks and Vegas Elvis’ karate swagger–he’s the best of both worlds!

"Cutting It Close" (2x1)

Hulu

Jesse’s rock and roll mullet goes bye-bye in this episode thanks to a pair of scissors and big oops-moment from Stephanie. But that’s not the worst thing that happens to Jesse in this bad luck episode. He also wrecks his bike and breaks both arms, which makes everything from playing guitar to eating cereal a true herculean feat.

"Dr. Dare Rides Again" (3x9)

Hulu

In this episode, Jesse’s past as a reckless rock and roll bad boy comes back to haunt him in the form of Scott Baio. In an effort to prove that he’s not lost his edge, Jesse gears up to attempt a super dangerous motorcycle stunt: riding his chopper along the edge of a tall building’s roof! Will Jesse come to his senses, or will he break his beautiful face trying to prove Chachi wrong?

"The I.Q. Man" (4x3)

Hulu

It doesn’t matter who you are, you know that John Stamos is hot. That is the truth, and it is a truth that Stamos’ leather-clad family man alter-ego shares. Everyone wants a piece of Jesse, but few ladies act on that after he settles down with Rebecca. Enter: one commercial producer that is thirsty AF for Uncle J. The normally cool and collected Jesse faces his most uncomfortable challenge yet when this woman in charge insists he strip down to a teeny washcloth to film this cologne commercial.

"The Wedding" (4x18)

Hulu

If you were to make a list of the things you should not do right before your wedding, “go skydiving” would have to be at the top of that list. Too bad Jesse didn’t make that list, because his anxious desire to have one final adventure as a single man leads him into a plane with Joey–who, by the way, is apparently a pilot?! Getting in an aircraft with Joey is one bad decision, and jumping from that plane while wearing a tuxedo is an even worse decision!

"Matchmaker Michelle" (5x2)

Hulu

When Jesse and the Rippers get turned down by another record company for being “too soft,” Uncle Jesse decides to toughen their image by donning a leather jumpsuit and the stage moniker Vulture. Jesse plans for everything in his big rock and roll rebirth–everything except for how to get down from his wire rig. Interesting to note: this Alice Cooper/hair metal approach to stagecraft was almost immediately outdated, as Nirvana’s grunge-opus Nevermind was released on the exact same day this episode aired. Soon after this, Jesse would start wearing a lot more flannel.

"Captain Video" (5x25)

Hulu

Never forget that the Beach Boys were basically recurring characters on Full House, starting with their first appearance in Season 2. A few years later, Mike Love and Bruce Johnston would return to lend their harmonious pipes to Jesse’s cover of The Beach Boys track “Forever.” This version would also be included on the legendary group’s 1992 album Summer in Paradise, complete with Stamos’ lead vocals. The truly wild thing about this episode (aside from Love and Johnston’s absolutely A+ choices in shirts) is that Stamos has a for real history with the Beach Boys! Pre-Full House, in-between his other acting gigs, Stamos would actually perform percussion for the Beach Boys in concert. Hell, you can see Stamos in the video for “Kokomo”!

"Kissing Cousins" (7x18)

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Stamos got to let his Greek flag really fly in this later episode, wherein he plays dual roles as Jesse and Jesse’s cousin Stavros. Technically this isn’t a wild Uncle Jesse episode, although it is a bit wild that Jesse would think bringing his skeevy cousin all the way back to San Fran would be a good idea. This is really a wild Stamos episode, as he gets to cut loose as Jesse’s over-the-top lecherous con artist cousin.

"Air Jesse" (8x16)

Hulu

Jesse’s cool in a lotta ways. He’s got great hair, cool jeans, a chill ‘tude, and effortless charisma. Turns out there’s one thing Jesse’s not good at: basketball. Who needs to hone skills on the court when you’ve already got skills on the stage? This becomes a problem when Jesse agrees to take part in a charity basketball game, but he gets help from an unexpected source: sports legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar!

"Uncle Jesse's Adventures in Babysitting" (3x5)

Netflix

Don’t you think for one second that Stamos’ ability to get wild on camera has diminished over the decades. Not true! One of Uncle Jesse’s wildest moments actually occurred in the sequel series Fuller House, an episode that dropped the coolest babysitter of all time back in his old gig with disastrous results. Turns out there is a limit to the number of kids one can watch at once, and Uncle Jesse found that out in one lengthy and calamitous sequence.